16.---Would you like some mutton noodles?
---______.
A. Yes, I would B. No, I wouldn’t C. No, I don’t D. Yes, please

17.---Thank you for the lovely party and the delicious food.
---______.
A. Thank, too B. Never mind C. With pleasure D. My pleasure

18. The poor young man is ready to accept __________ help he can get.
A. whichever B. however C. whatever D. whenever

19. ---What about going to the theatre this evening?
---_____.
A. Help yourself B. Good idea C. That’s all right D. Not at all

20. He spent so much on the watch. He _____ be poor.
A. can B. must C. can’t D. mustn’t

第二节：阅读理解(共20小题，每小题2分，满分40分)
阅读下列短文，从每题所给的四个选项A、B、C、D中，选出最佳选项，并将该选项标号写在答题
AEmily Urich 18 years old, Canada
A lot of teens aren’t responsible and that’s where I’m different, not just about school but everyday things like being able to pay my own credit card bills on time.
The first time I got a cartoon book was on my third birthday. From then on, I fell in deep love with it. And can you guess how many cartoon books I’ve read? I don’t really know the exact number. But I have three full boxes of them under my bed. I also like drawing cartoons and want to be an art teacher in a school.

Joe Miller 16 years old, America
I’m proud of doing things in my own way. So whether somebody wants me to do something and whatever it is, I feel like they’re all others’ thoughts, not really mine. But like others, I love reading, too.
When I first took skiing lessons, I found it exciting and fun. I mean it is a challenge. In order to improve my skiing skills, I have read many books and magazines about it. It’s my dream to win gold medals in the Olympic Games.

An Qi 15 years old, China
I’m different because I prefer to create my own world. I’d like to build a house on a mountain, and choose to live without electricity, a telephone and even an indoor bathroom.
I have many hobbies such as traveling, reading, writing and spending time with children. I love children because they are smart and creative. They always have many strange ideas. It makes me excited. I want to do something for Hope Project and become a country schoolteacher.

21.Who wants to be a teacher?
A. Emily and Joe. B. Joe and An Qi.
C. Emily and An Qi. D. Only An Qi.

22.What do the three students all like?
A. Writing. B. Skiing. C. Traveling D. Reading

23.According to Emily’s words, we can infer(推断) that _______.
A. people around believe in her B. she does sports at weekends
C. she likes to laugh at others D. she gets up late on Sundays

25. Why does An Qi want to be a country schoolteacher?
A. Because she wants to travel.
B. Because her parents are teachers.
C. Because she loves children very much.
D. Because she comes from the countryside.

B
Some people have very good memories. They can easily learn quite long poems by heart. But other people can only remember things when they have said them over and over.
It is well-known that Charles Dickens was the famous English author. He said that he could walk along any long street in London and then told you the name of every shop he had passed. Many great men of the world have had excellent memories.
A good memory is a great help in learning a language. Each person learns mother tongue by remembering what he hears when he is a small child. Some children live in foreign countries with their parents. They seem to learn two languages almost as easily as one. In schools it is not easy to learn a second language because there is no time for it, and they are busy with other subjects as well.
The human mind is rather like a camera, but it takes photographs not only of what we see but of what we feel, hear, smell and taste. When we take a real photograph with a camera, there is a lot of work to do before taking the photograph to show our friends. In the same way there is much work to be done before we can make a picture which remains forever in the mind. Memory is just like diary that we all take down with us.

26._____ have good memories.
A. Some great people
B. Only great people
C. The children who live in foreign countries with their parents
D. The pupils who study a second language in schools

27. It is said in the passage that Charles Dickens could remember things by______.
A. looking at them over and over
B. saying them over and over
C. looking at them once
D. saying them loudly once

28. Everybody learns his own language by______.
A. taking photographs with a camera and remaining them in the mind
B. being taught when he is a small child
C. remembering what he hears when he is a small child
D. going to other countries

29.According to the passage, it is _____ to learn a second language in their own countries than in foreign countries.
A. slower B. easier C. quicker D. more difficult

30. Which of the following is true?
A. Memory is very important in learning a foreign language.
B. A person learns his own language by remembering what he hears when he is born.
C. An adult can pick up a language more easily than a child.
D. Our memory is just like a camera.

C
One day , an old farmer was walking along a road with his son Leo. The father said, “Look! There’s a horseshoe. Pick it up and put it in your bag.” Leo said slowly, “It isn’t worth the trouble, Daddy.” His father said nothing but he picked it up himself. When they got to a nearby town, they had a rest. There the farmer sold the horseshoe and bought some cherries(樱桃) with the few pennies.
The father and the son continued their way. The sun was very strong in the sky. They couldn’t have a rest because there wasn’t a house or even a tree. Leo felt too thirsty to walk on. At this time, his father dropped another cherry and once again, his son picked it up and put it into his mouth again and again.
And so they went on. The old farmer dropped the cherries and the son picked them up. When Leo had eaten up all the cherries, his father said to him, “My dear son, if you had bent down early to pick up that horseshoe, you wouldn’t bend so many times for the cherries. Always remember the lesson: if a person does not worry about the little things, he cannot do the great things.”

31. Who picked up the horseshoe at last?
A. The son. B. The father.
C. Both the father and the son. D. Neither the father nor the son.

32. The farmer bought _____ with the money after he sold the horseshoe.
A. some bread B. some water C. some cherries D. some pennies

33. When the son refused to pick up the horseshoe, the father_____.
A. beat the son B. said nothing C. felt very happy D. became very angry

34. The father dropped the cherries one by one, because_____.
A. he wanted to teach his son a lesson
B. he wanted his son to do more exercise
C. he wanted his son to eat them all
D. he wanted to laugh at his son

35. From the story, we can learn that_____.
A. cherries are so delicious that most of us like to eat them
B. a horseshoe is so expensive that it can bring us a lot of money
C. if we want to eat cherries, we must pick up a horseshoe
D. if we don’t worry about the little things, we cannot do the great things

D
J.K.(Jo) Rowling was born in Chipping Sodbury in the UK in 1965. Her name sounds funny. It is just because she likes collecting strange names.
Jo moved house twice when she was growing up. The first move was from Yate to Winterbourne. Jo used to play together with her sister and friends in the street in Winterbourne. Two of her friends’ surname just happened to be Potter! They were brother and sister from the Potters. When Jo was nine, she moved to Tutshill near Chepstow in the Forest of Dean. It was her second move. Jo loved living in the countryside and she often spent hours walking along the river Wye with her sister because she didn’t like her new school at all.
Tutshill Primary School was very small and old-fashioned. On the first day, Jo’s teacher, Mrs Morgan, gave Jo an arithmetic test. It was so hard that Jo got zero in the test. The teacher thought Jo was stupid and seated her in the “stupid row”.
Jo went to Wyedean Comprehensive after she left Tutshill Primary. She was quiet, short-sighted and not very good at sports. Her favorite subjects were English and languages.
Jo loved writing more than anything. When she was five or six, she wrote her first story. It was about a rabbit called Rabbit. Then, she began to dream of being a writer. She
didn’t tell anyone about it. She was afraid they might tell her she didn’t have a hope.

36.Why did Jo get such a strange name?
A. Because her parents like strange names.
B. Because she likes collecting strange names.
C. Because she doesn’t know about any other names.
D. Because her parents didn’t know how to select a good name.

37. Which is true about her experience?
A. Her first move is from Tutshill to Winterbourne.
B. In Winterbourne, she used to play with her sister and the dogs in the street.
C. When she was nine, she made her first move.
D. Two of her friends’ surname was Potter.

38. What did Jo think of Tutshill Primary School?
A. She thought it was a great school.
B. She liked it because it was big and new.
C. She didn’t like it because the teachers there thought her stupid.
D. She thought it was a funny school.

39. What do we know about Jo when she was in Wydedean Comprehensive?
A. She was active and fond of sports.
B. She was short-sighted and didn’t do well in sports.
C. She liked English and math best.
D. She was stupid and sat in the “stupid row”.

40. Why didn’t Jo tell her dream to others?
A. Because she was afraid they might let her secret out.
B. Because she didn’t want to be told that she didn’t have a hope.
C. Because she wanted to give others a surprise.
D. Because she didn’t have any friends.